HONOLULU — Despite a challenging first term marked by both natural and man-made disasters, Hawaii Gov. David Ige won the Democratic primary in his bid for a second term in office Saturday, defeating U.S. Rep. Colleen Hanabusa.

Ige’s administration fumbled through a false missile alert that sent the state into a panic in January, a major embarrassment for his administration. But the governor’s handling of Kilauea volcano’s latest eruption, which destroyed more than 700 homes and displaced thousands, as well as devastating flooding on Kauai got him back on track and he came out ahead of Hanabusa.

“It’s been a grueling campaign,” Ige said. “It’s truly a heart-warming finish to a very, very challenging and exciting time.”

Ige said he expects to win the general election in November, but he’s not going to take his challenger for granted.

“I will not take anything for granted, we are going to gear up for another tough campaign, but we do believe that we have a vision and that the people have spoken,” Ige said.

The governor said Hanabusa called him and pledged her support, and that he looks forward to working with her and her supporters over the next several months.

“The most important thing about the election is the fact that we gave people choices, and the people have spoken,” Hanabusa said during her concession speech. “It was about giving people the choice.”

Hanabusa, who gave up her seat in Congress to challenge Ige, thanked the people that worked on her campaign. “You’ve given me everything,” she said.

“What we will start tomorrow as Democrats is hopefully the healing process,” she said. “I will be there.”

Former U.S. Rep. Ed Case emerged from a crowded field to win the Democratic Party primary in the hopes of filling Hanabusa’s spot in Congress.

The 65-year-old fiscal conservative defeated five other major candidates including Lt. Gov. Doug Chin, who is the architect of Hawaii’s legal battle against President Donald Trump’s travel ban.

“I think voters want Washington to work again, that’s the number one issue,” Case said. “I was clearly saying we need to fix Washington and we need to work together, and that message clearly resonated with many voters.”

He’ll face Cam Cavasso, a former state representative who previously ran unsuccessfully for the U.S. Senate. Cavasso won the GOP primary. The winner of the Democratic primary is almost guaranteed to win in the general election in Hawaii.

Ige campaigned on his efforts on increasing affordable housing and addressing the state’s homeless problem. Hawaii has had the highest rate of homeless per capita in the nation for many years and is one of the most expensive places to live in the country.

The next governor will also face the aftermath of Kilauea volcano’s latest destructive eruption that began in May. Most of the residents displaced by the lava flows did not have insurance that would cover lava damage.

The volcano is also the most visited tourist site in the state, and the decline in visitors has caused a ripple effect throughout the local economy.

And despite better relations between the United States and North Korea, Hawaii is still a strategic military outpost in the Pacific that could be the target of foreign military threats.

Daryl Chang, a Republican who works in the medical field in Honolulu, voted for Ige, a Democrat, in Saturday’s gubernatorial primary.

“I think he is thoughtful and he does what he thinks is right,” Chang said.

Some in Hawaii have been critical of Ige’s response to the false missile alert, but Chang, 64, said he doesn’t see the governor as being ultimately responsible.

“There’s deficiencies in all the departments.” Chang said of the emergency department that sent the alert. “I didn’t blame Ige for it.”

Chang said he knows the Republican nominee doesn’t have much of a chance in November, which is why he voted on the Democrat side. If he had voted within his party, he would have chosen state House Minority Leader state Rep. Andria Tupola.

“I think Tupola is refreshing,” Chang said. “If I were going to vote in the Republican primary, I would have voted for her because she’s a new voice and maybe she can bring about change.”

Tupola won the GOP nomination, defeating former Pearl Harbor nonprofit CEO Ray L’Heureux and former state senator John Carroll.

Tupola said she’s excited to move forward to the general election.

“Once you step into the general, then it’s any man’s game,” Tupola said. “It’s not a party thing, it’s look at the best candidate and make your best vote.”

Tupola said one of her primary focuses as governor would be to address affordable housing and to fight for Native Hawaiians to get the opportunity to use land set aside for them decades ago.

But Ige will likely get the job the general election. Hawaii has had only two Republican governors since it became a state and the vast majority of islands’ residents consistently vote blue.

Jinjer Boots, 26, a Democrat, voted for Hanabusa. As she left her polling place Saturday with her daughter, Cataleia, 3, Boots said she liked that Hanabusa was fighting for women’s rights and that was a major factor for her.

“I like that she fights for women’s rights,” she said. “I do think that she will speak up more for us, with Ige he was very quiet.”